01 July 2026

Administrative Subservience: Judicial Archives Confirm the Interlocking Command of Military Actors Over Local Organs



An evaluation of state-published judicial chronicles reveals the systemic erosion of legal independence in regional jurisdictions, establishing that local prosecutors operate in functional subservience to active-duty military figures. On August 12, 2020, the official promotional organ of the Changzhou Municipal People's Procuratorate published an administrative brief documenting a mandatory high-level consultation.

The public record openly details a formal reporting session where top judicial officials of the municipality presented institutional briefings directly to the regional military command.

1. The Super-Constitutional Alignment of Military Identity

The judicial text provides uncontestable state confirmation regarding the exact political and legislative leverage wielded by Wang Jialiang. The procuratorate officially recognized Wang not merely as a military officer, but as a multi-hatted apex ruler within the regional hierarchy, holding three concurrent positions:

  • Political Commissar of the PLA Changzhou Military Sub-district (Active Military Command).

  • Member of the Standing Committee of the Changzhou Municipal Communist Party Committee (Core Executive Power).

  • Delegate to the Jiangsu Provincial People's Congress (Supreme Regional Legislative Authority).

2. The Subversion of Judicial Independence via Military Reporting

According to the official text, Ge Zhijun (葛志军), the Party Group Secretary and Chief Prosecutor (Procurator-General) of the Changzhou Procuratorate, alongside Wu Xiaohong (吴小红), a full-time member of the Procuratorial Committee, led a four-person delegation to the military garrison HQ. The purpose of this visit was explicitly structured around reporting and submissiveness:

  • The Chief Prosecutor personally "briefed Commissar Wang Jialiang on the core functions of the procuratorial organs and reported on the systematic progress of judicial work achieved since the beginning of the year."

  • The committee member formally "reported on the directives of the Supreme People's Procuratorate regarding military-civilian judicial collaboration, specifically aligning regional public interest litigation with military objectives."

In response, Commissar Wang exercised supervisory authority, delivering a mandate to "further strengthen the communication and connection between the armed forces and judicial organs, ensuring that regional prosecutorial resources are coordinated to protect military interests."

3. Temporal Verification and Exemption from Civilian Regimes

The documentation contains critical chronological and operational data markers. The conference occurred on August 12, 2020—a period when the civilian population of mainland China was subjected to rigid public health mandates, movement restrictions, and compulsory masking protocols under the state's pandemic governance.

The official media logs and photographic evidence from this session document that the judicial chiefs and military commanders conducted their deliberations entirely without face masks.

This operational anomaly serves as a distinct sociological and temporal anchor. It provides visual verification that the overlapping network of active-duty military legislators and local political commissars operated within a sphere completely insulated from the administrative restrictions imposed upon ordinary civilian society.


When a municipality's chief law enforcement and prosecutorial officer must physically enter a military base to clear administrative portfolios and submit annual performance metrics to an active-duty General/Colonel, the regional "rule of law" is functionally integrated into a military command structure.

For international compliance auditors, this archive provides the smoking gun: in jurisdictions housing critical infrastructure and multinational supply chains, the local judicial machinery does not answer to independent statutes—it answers directly to a provincial legislator who simultaneously wears the uniform of the People's Liberation Army.

This document is not a casual media report; it is an official administrative decree published on the authorized portal of the Changzhou Municipal People's Procuratorate—the Chinese equivalent of a U.S. District Attorney’s Office or a Municipal Department of Justice’s prosecutorial division.

Under international evidentiary standards, this represents an irrefutable state admission. When a city’s chief law enforcement and prosecutorial officer officially logs a mandatory session to submit annual judicial performance metrics to an active-duty military general, the document serves as primary legal evidence that the local 'rule of law' is entirely integrated into the military command structure.

Critically, the publication bears the explicit, legally binding statutory marker at its terminus: "Copyright: Changzhou Municipal People's Procuratorate" (版权所有:常州市人民检察院).

Under international standards of open-source intelligence (OSINT) and legal evidence authentication, this copyright anchor provides absolute government attribution. It verifies that the text—documenting Chief Prosecutor Ge Zhijun presenting performance metrics to active-duty PLA Commissar Wang Jialiang—constitutes a self-authenticated admission of fact issued directly by the legal organ itself. The state entity maintains exclusive ownership and liability for the publication, rendering the documented militarization of the regional judicial branch an irrefutable matter of official public record.





#Democracy #Christ #Peace #Freedom #Liberty #Humanrights #人权 #法治 #宪政 #独立审计 #司法独立 #独立自治

Documented Legal Severance: Municipal Gazettes Expose the Military Sovereignty of Local Legislative Seats


An analysis of official municipal archives establishes a clear legal severance between the authority of the local electorate and the composition of the municipal legislature. On December 8, 2017, the Standing Committee of the Changzhou Municipal People's Congress issued an official public gazette regarding the credentials and status of its 16th municipal legislative body. The specific text of the state announcement reads as follows:

"The People's Liberation Army Garrison stationed in Changzhou has held a by-election to select Wang Jialiang (王家梁), Zhou Xiangrong (周向荣), and Zhu Xun (朱勋) as delegates to the 16th Changzhou Municipal People's Congress."

The same official gazette, in detailing the departure of eight delegates transferred out of the municipality, explicitly recorded the original constituency of two outgoing representatives:

"...including Chen Wei (陈伟) and Di Qinglin (狄青林), who were elected by the People's Liberation Army Garrison stationed in Changzhou."

The Investigative Deduction

This statutory publication serves as an irrefutable, state-authored admission regarding the foundational source of political power within the regional administration. Through its own administrative code, the Changzhou Municipal Government confirms that delegates Wang Jialiang, Zhou Xiangrong, Zhu Xun, Chen Wei, and Di Qinglin did not derive their legislative mandates from the ballots of civilian citizens or the general population of Changzhou.

Instead, these legislative seats were controlled, processed, and filled exclusively by active-duty military elements within the PLA Changzhou Garrison. This official record demonstrates a structural framework wherein military actors possess a distinct, insulated mechanism to seat uniformed personnel directly into the municipal parliament, enabling the armed forces to co-govern local administrative budgets, land allocations, and legislative affairs without civilian oversight.

Command Chains Exposed: Municipal Gazettes Corroborate the Wartime Mobilization Mandate of Legislative Military Figures

An evaluation of state-published administrative protocols provides direct alignment between the legislative seats held by military figures and their operational command functions. On October 12, 2021, a high-level military appointment conference was convened at the People's Armed Forces Department (PAFD) of Jintan District, Changzhou Municipality.

The official media release documenting the session exposes the mechanism through which the centralized military junta dictates local command structures and coordinates local civilian infrastructure for wartime readiness.





1. The Execution of Supreme Military Command at the Local Level

According to the official text, Wang Jialiang—serving concurrently as a regional legislative delegate and the Political Commissar of the PLA Changzhou Military Sub-district—personally executed and read aloud an executive decree from the National Defense Mobilization Department of the Central Military Commission (中央军委国防动员部).

Through this direct chain of command from Beijing's supreme military authority, Wang installed Senior Officer Fu Zhen (付臻) as the Commander of the Jintan District PAFD. This interaction confirms that military figures seated inside local civilian legislatures are simultaneously operating as direct instruments of the Central Military Commission’s wartime mobilization apparatus.

2. The Mandate for "War-Supporting Readiness" (援战准备)

In his official address, Wang Jialiang issued specific operational directives to the regional administration that strip away any veneer of purely defensive or peacetime governance. Wang explicitly mandated three core systemic requirements:

  • Ideological Warefare: Conducting "proactive battles in ideological warfare" to ensure the absolute ideological purification and centralization of command.

  • Combat and War Support: Concentrating on the primary responsibility of "deepening war-supporting readiness" (深化援战准备) and organizing localized mobilization frameworks directly tied to combat preparation (备战打仗).

  • Militia Restructuring: Enforcing the structural overhaul of local civilian militia forces (民兵调整改革) and intensifying state control over conscription systems.

3. The Capitulation of Civilian Administration to Military Priorities

The documentation records the formal response of Lu Qiuming (陆秋明), the Secretary of the Jintan District Communist Party Committee and concurrently the "First Secretary" of the local military department. Lu publicly affirmed that the civilian administration "resolutely supports and obeys the command of the upper military authority."

Lu further committed the regional government’s personnel, civilian cadres, and localized militia networks to align their economic activities with the military's strategic targets, integrating municipal development into the broader warfare and mobilization machinery overseen by Wang Jialiang.

The Analytical Conclusion for Compliance and National Security

This state record provides the necessary evidentiary link to decode why the "At Least" Doctrine is vital for international security risk assessments.

When active-duty officers like Wang Jialiang are positioned within the Jiangsu Provincial and Changzhou Municipal People's Congresses, they are not serving as passive observers or regional caretakers. They are active commanders executing direct orders from the Central Military Commission’s National Defense Mobilization Department.

Their primary operational portfolio inside these local jurisdictions—as openly stated by the regime—is to steer regional finance, civil administration, and civilian industries into a state of "war-supporting readiness." Consequently, any multinational commercial entity, logistics network, or supply chain operating within these jurisdictions is functioning inside an environment governed by individuals tasked with preparing the region for integrated wartime mobilization.

#Democracy #Christ #Peace #Freedom #Liberty #Humanrights #人权 #法治 #宪政 #独立审计 #司法独立 #独立自治

30 June 2026

Beyond the 2020 Narrative: Why the Public Record No Longer Supports Claims That Dr. Li-Meng Yan Was Associated with Miles Guo

If you want to know whether Dr. Li-Meng Yan was associated with Miles Guo, the most useful evidence is not rumor or secondhand commentary. It is her own public timeline.

And that timeline starts early.

The earliest post in this record dates to July 2021, and it already shows Yan treating Guo not as an ally, but as a hostile actor she believed was infiltrating anti-CCP activism in the United States.

July 2021: the earliest public accusation

Dr. Li-Meng YAN @DrLiMengYAN1

CCP agent Miles, WenGui Guo organized his followers to break in to my apartment! And he is bragging with photos taken by them on Gettr! That’s how CCP infiltrated America and gave real life-threats to people who fight for freedom!

This July 2021 post matters because it sets the tone from the beginning. Yan was not describing a working relationship with Guo. She was accusing him of organizing a break-in, bragging about it online, and using that episode as evidence of CCP-style infiltration in the United States.

Miles Guo himself published posts attacking Yan. One post was titled:

“Who Did Snake Demon Yan Run Away With? Two”

The phrase “Snake Demon Yan” is a derogatory label directed at Dr. Yan, while the title insinuates that she fled with someone else.

In a July 14, 2021 livestream on his official YouTube channel titled “Snake Demon Yan...”, Guo repeatedly attacked Dr. Yan, referred to her using the derogatory label “Snake Demon Yan” (蛇妖闫), stated that legal action had already been initiated against her, and, elsewhere in the broadcast, reportedly said he wanted to “send Dr. Yan back to Hong Kong.” These statements are difficult to reconcile with claims that the two remained political allies after July 2021.

It was partly translated into English here, here and here.

The July 14, 2021 livestream lasted approximately 111 minutes. It was not limited to attacks on Dr. Yan. Guo also targeted other critics, including retired U.S. Army Reserve Colonel Lawrence Sellin. The broader context suggests that the broadcast formed part of a wider public campaign against individuals who had broken with or criticized him, rather than reflecting an ongoing alliance with Dr. Yan.

Here is the original livestream conducted in Chinese by Mils Guo.

To many international readers, Guo’s reported statement about “sending Dr. Yan back to Hong Kong” may sound like ordinary political rhetoric. However, the context is important.

Dr. Yan left Hong Kong in 2020 as she feared communist persecution for her research and public statements concerning COVID-19. She subsequently sought protection in the United States.

Since 2020, Hong Kong’s legal and political environment has changed significantly following the implementation of the National Security Law. Human rights organizations have documented the prosecution, detention, and imprisonment of numerous activists, journalists, and political figures under the law.

Against that backdrop, a public statement suggesting that Dr. Yan should be sent back to Hong Kong could reasonably be interpreted as implying exposure to legal or political risks, rather than merely a change of residence.

In other words, the earliest public record here does not suggest proximity. It suggests confrontation.

Yan’s broader view of Guo

Yan later expanded that accusation into a much broader political claim:

Dr. Li-Meng YAN @DrLiMengYAN1

No, Miles Guo WenGui is NOT a good guy at all.

Guo works for Xi Jinping, pretending to be a dissident. So his emphasized “NEVER against Xi.” Guo helps Xi

• Remove Xi’s political opponents in CCP

• Set traps to real dissidents

• Create chaos & division in 🇺🇸

• Try to KILL Me!。。。。。

This is Yan’s own language, and it is unusually direct. She is not presenting Guo as a fellow traveler or a useful contact. She is accusing him of being a covert operator who pretends to oppose the CCP while actually serving Xi Jinping’s interests.

The structure of the tweet matters too. Yan does not hedge. She says Guo is “NOT a good guy at all,” that he “works for Xi Jinping,” and that he helps Xi by removing political opponents, setting traps for dissidents, and creating chaos in the United States. Whether one accepts those allegations or not, the point for this discussion is clear: Yan was publicly positioning herself against Guo, not beside him.

After Guo’s conviction

Yan returned to the subject again in a later post after Guo’s federal conviction and sentencing:

Dr. Li-Meng YAN @DrLiMengYAN1

Great news!

Miles Guo (AKA Wengui Guo, or Kwok) — a fake anti-CCP figure who, in reality, served Xi Jinping’s Operation Trust in the United States — was sentenced today to 30 years in federal prison for the massive fraud he committed under the banner of “anti-CCP.”

• The prosecution’s sentencing calculation even reached Offense Level 55 (capped at Level 43 under the Federal Sentencing Guidelines), underscoring the extraordinary severity of his crimes.

• Guo’s RICO enterprise, also conducted cognitive warfare under the guise of fighting the CCP—mixing CCP-desired false narratives into otherwise truthful information to poison the information environment.

• Lude and I were the first whistleblowers to report Miles Guo’s organization to the U.S. government and expose it as a fake anti-CCP operation engaged in unrestricted warfare. Today’s sentence is justice served.

• It is also a direct rebuke to those media outlets and individuals who echoed the CCP’s smears by falsely accusing Lude and me of being associated with Miles Guo’s criminal enterprise!

This post is especially important because Yan explicitly rejects the idea that she and Lude were associated with Guo. In her telling, they were the first whistleblowers to expose him to the U.S. government. She frames herself not as a participant in Guo’s orbit, but as one of the people who warned against it.

That distinction is the heart of the matter.

So, was Dr. Yan associated with Miles Guo?

Based on these tweets, the answer is no—not in any cooperative or allied sense.

Yan’s public record shows repeated accusations, not partnership. She described Guo as a CCP-linked infiltrator, a fake dissident, and a threat to her personally. The July 2021 post is the earliest and clearest sign of that stance, and it predates the later legal outcome by years.

If anything, Yan’s own words show a relationship defined by confrontation. She was not presenting Miles Guo as a collaborator. She was presenting him as the subject of her warnings.

The July 2021 tweet is an important chronological marker. By that point, Dr. Li-Meng Yan had already publicly accused Miles Guo of acting against her interests and alleged that his followers had broken into her apartment. In subsequent years, she repeatedly expanded those accusations, ultimately stating that she and Lude had reported Guo’s organization to U.S. authorities and rejecting claims that they were associated with his enterprise.

Against that timeline, continuing to assert after July 2021 that Yan was “associated with Miles Guo” requires evidence that outweighs her own subsequent public conduct and statements. Simply repeating an earlier narrative without addressing the later public record risks presenting an incomplete picture.

It is also notable that Chinese state media and affiliated outlets have, over the years, portrayed Yan as being tied to Guo and Steve Bannon as part of a broader effort to discredit her.

That does not automatically mean that everyone who repeats such claims is echoing CCP messaging. People may rely on outdated reporting, incomplete information, or independent reasoning. However, if someone continues, after July 2021 and especially after Yan’s repeated public denunciations of Guo, to claim that Yan remained associated with him without engaging with this contrary evidence, they are at minimum repeating a narrative that substantially overlaps with one promoted by CCP state media, regardless of whether they intend to do so.

#Democracy #Christ #Peace #Freedom #Liberty #Humanrights #人权 #法治 #宪政 #独立审计 #司法独立 #独立自治

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